New Beatles Book Presents Evidence And The Story Of The Death And Replacement Of Paul McCartney
“Beatles, the Death and Replacement of Paul McCartney, The Untold Story” authored by Ernie Schultze will soon be available (Date) as published by A-Argus Books publishing. Just when you thought there could not possibly be another Beatles book, author Ernie Schultze jolts the literary establishment with his latest. Beatles: The Death and Replacement of Paul McCartney, compiles evidence based on rumors that Paul was killed in a car crash in November 1966, then conveniently replaced by a talented look-alike, groomed for the seamless take-over.
Baby Boomers who went through Beatlemainea, many hearing the rumor and accepting it as true, can now read about what really happened. The events and cover-up afforded by English law makes an intriguing story. The English economy was in the middle of a Sterling crisis and the Beatles revenues pulled the economy out of a hole. Those revenues and his association with the Beatles got the Prime Minister elected. The Prime Minister, the Queen and the “Official Secrets Act” could not have let him die regardless of what happened or the economy, political and corporate fortunes would tank. The relationship with the new member, the look-alike, sets off a heavy strain on the group. There is a tragic inevitability about the events of the Beatles' rise and fall that places the story in the realm of great literature. Consider the Breakup: what the public knows -- the Official Version -- is not even in the same universe as what actually happened. The Beatles themselves confirm this. This book incorporates it all in a narrative fashion.
“Beatles, the Death and Replacement of Paul McCartney, The Untold Story” authored by Ernie Schultze will soon be available (Date) as published by A-Argus Books publishing. Just when you thought there could not possibly be another Beatles book, author Ernie Schultze jolts the literary establishment with his latest. Beatles: The Death and Replacement of Paul McCartney, compiles evidence based on rumors that Paul was killed in a car crash in November 1966, then conveniently replaced by a talented look-alike, groomed for the seamless take-over.
Baby Boomers who went through Beatlemainea, many hearing the rumor and accepting it as true, can now read about what really happened. The events and cover-up afforded by English law makes an intriguing story. The English economy was in the middle of a Sterling crisis and the Beatles revenues pulled the economy out of a hole. Those revenues and his association with the Beatles got the Prime Minister elected. The Prime Minister, the Queen and the “Official Secrets Act” could not have let him die regardless of what happened or the economy, political and corporate fortunes would tank. The relationship with the new member, the look-alike, sets off a heavy strain on the group. There is a tragic inevitability about the events of the Beatles' rise and fall that places the story in the realm of great literature. Consider the Breakup: what the public knows -- the Official Version -- is not even in the same universe as what actually happened. The Beatles themselves confirm this. This book incorporates it all in a narrative fashion.